Lynn v. George

223 Cal. Rptr. 3d 407, 15 Cal. App. 5th 630, 2017 WL 4173330, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 817
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedSeptember 21, 2017
DocketG053563
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 223 Cal. Rptr. 3d 407 (Lynn v. George) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynn v. George, 223 Cal. Rptr. 3d 407, 15 Cal. App. 5th 630, 2017 WL 4173330, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 817 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FYBEL, J.

*633INTRODUCTION

Defendants Steve George and Real Estate Portfolio Management, LLC (REPM) appeal from the trial court's order granting the motion of plaintiffs Angelica Lynn and Angel Lynn Realty, Inc. (ALR) to disqualify counsel.1 George and REPM were represented in the trial court by attorney Kevin A. Spainhour and his law firm, Spainhour Law Group (SLG), who were the subjects of the motion to disqualify. Spainhour had represented George for over 15 years and REPM for several years.

Lynn and ALR alleged in their complaint that they had formed a partnership with George and REPM for buying and selling real property. Lynn and ALR moved to disqualify Spainhour and SLG on the ground they had represented the alleged partnership and had provided Lynn legal advice relating to a proposed sale transaction. Alternatively, Lynn and ALR asserted they had a confidential nonclient relationship with Spainhour and SLG.

The trial court expressly found that neither Spainhour nor SLG had represented Lynn or ALR in their individual capacities, that Spainhour and SLG represented REPM, and that any legal advice rendered to Lynn and ALR related solely to their work as REPM's broker of record. The court declined to decide whether a partnership was formed and whether Spainhour and SLP represented any such partnership. Although the court did not find a past attorney-client relationship amongst Lynn, ALR, Spainhour, and SLG, the court found there had been a confidential nonclient relationship between Lynn and ALR, on the one hand, and Spainhour and SLG, on the other, and a "potential attorney-client relationship with the alleged partnership." Based on those findings, the court granted the motion to disqualify.

We reverse. Substantial *411evidence did not support the trial court's finding of a confidential nonclient relationship. Lynn and ALR had the burden of proving grounds for disqualification, and the evidence they submitted in *634support of the motion to disqualify showed the information they had disclosed to Spainhour was either shared with persons other than Spainhour, or was related to her role as the broker for the transaction. The evidence did not support a finding that Spainhour had acquired confidential information from Lynn and ALR or that a confidential relationship had arisen.

The parties devote a significant portion of their appellate briefs addressing whether the evidence supported a finding of a partnership relationship. We cannot infer the trial court made an implied finding that a partnership existed because the trial court expressly declined to make such a finding. The trial court found only a "potential attorney-client relationship with the alleged partnership." (Italics added.) A potential attorney-client relationship is not enough to deprive clients of their right to counsel of their choice. There must have been either an attorney-client relationship or a confidential nonclient relationship. As to the former, the trial court found that Spainhour and SLG did not represent Lynn and ALR, and, as to the latter, substantial evidence did not support the finding of a confidential nonclient relationship.

BACKGROUND

REPM is a real estate investment company that buys and sells real estate investment properties for a profit. George is the "Managing Member of REPM." Spainhour is an attorney who, as of March 2016, had represented George for over 15 years and REPM for several years. REPM employs, hires, or retains the services of dozens of real estate professionals, including licensed real estate brokers, in order to carry out its business. Lynn is the owner of ALR.

A central issue in this case is the relationship between REPM and ALR. The complaint alleges, and Lynn stated in her declaration in support of the motion to disqualify, that, in November 2011, ALR and REPM orally agreed to form a partnership for the purpose of purchasing and "flipping" property. REPM and George take the position that ALR was not a partner but was one of several real estate brokers retained by REPM, and, since 2011, closed over 30 transactions representing REPM as a buyer and 32 transactions representing REPM as the seller. It was undisputed that ALR served as the broker of record and property manager for the properties, whether owned by the alleged partnership or REPM.

In December 2013, either the alleged partnership or REPM purchased three pieces of property on L Street in Sacramento (the L Street Properties). Sometime in early 2015, negotiations commenced for selling the L Street Properties to another real estate investment firm. Spainhour, who had represented George since about 2001, represented the seller (either the alleged *635partnership or REPM) in the negotiations. During the course of the negotiations, Spainhour communicated with Lynn several times by e-mail, copied her on some e-mails sent to George, and spoke with her at least once by telephone. The proposed sale did not go through.

The relationship between REPM and ALR deteriorated. In November 2015, Lynn and ALR filed a complaint against George and REPM for breach of partnership agreement, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, constructive fraud, accounting, and dissolution of partnership. The complaint alleged, among other things, that George and REPM refused reasonable offers for the purchase and sale of the L Street Properties, collected rental income from the L Street Properties and withheld that income from the alleged partnership, tried to oust ALR from the alleged partnership, and failed to correctly compute partnership profits. The trial court granted a motion by George and REPM to transfer the case from Sacramento County to Orange County.

In March 2016, Lynn and ALR filed their motion to disqualify counsel for George and REPM, namely, Spainhour and SLG. The trial court, after hearing the motion and taking it under submission, issued a minute order granting the motion. The court found that Lynn and ALR did not establish they had had a "personal attorney-client relationship" with Spainhour and SLG. "However," the court found, "the evidence indicates that Mr. Spainhour and [SLG] may have taken on implicit obligations to the plaintiffs as nonclients, or may have acted as attorneys to the plaintiffs in their capacity as partners in the partnership alleged." The trial court found that none of the e-mails showed that Spainhour or SLG impliedly agreed to refrain from accepting representations adverse to Lynn or ALR, and "[t]he only evidence showing any potentially personal legal advice to Ms. Lynn was related to disclosures to be made to the buyer in the transaction, which could reasonably be *412considered part of Mr. Spainhour's representation of the seller in its effort to efficiently close a real estate transaction."

The trial court did find "the e-mails suggest that a confidential nonclient relationship had been established between plaintiffs and Mr. Spainhour so as to pose a conflict with respect to Mr. Spainhour's and SLG's current representation of defendants." While acknowledging a legitimate question as to whether a partnership had been formed for the L Street Properties, the court noted the "[e-mails] from Ms. Lynn and Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 Cal. Rptr. 3d 407, 15 Cal. App. 5th 630, 2017 WL 4173330, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-george-calctapp5d-2017.